[2] The party leader anticipated economic crisis in the country which he felt would set up the basis for a takeover by revolutionary nationalism.
[3] Biondini is a veteran of the international neo-Nazi scene, having established a group called Alerta Nacional in 1984, which he described as 'a small part of the great worldwide socialist movement'.
[5] At a time when use of the internet by fringe political groups was limited but growing in popularity the New Triumph Party's online publication Libertad de Opinión (Freedom of Opinion) broke new ground in Argentina by providing a regular forum for Argentine neo-Nazism and anti-Semitism.
[2] Nonetheless, in the 2005 Argentine legislative election Biondini's wife and son, members of the party, stood as candidates for Acción Ciudadana, a group headed by Jorge Colotto, the general commissioner of the Policía Federal Argentina.
He has claimed that in the final days in the Führerbunker Hitler pointed to Argentina on a map and stated that 'from there the new leader will come'.